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edict and provoked
It is very probable that the edict was an attempt to legitimize his position and to respond to a general unease provoked by the passing of the Roman millennium.
During his consulship a law was passed ( the lex Licinia Mucia ) requiring all but citizens to leave Rome, an edict which provoked the Social War.

edict and another
The queen insisted upon another colloquy, which was opened at St. Germain Jan. 28, 1562, eleven days after the proclamation of the famous January edict which granted important privileges to those of the Reformed faith.
Ten years later, naturally, another edict appeared, reminding of the necessity to do something with illegal migrants ...
Sixty years later, Philippe the Good, issued another edict against Gamay in which he stated the reasoning for the ban is that " The Dukes of Burgundy are known as the lords of the best wines in Christendom.
On another occasion, when Yu became angry with his assistant Xue Zhenglun ( 薛正倫 ), he requested Emperor Dezong to demote Xue to be the secretary general of Xia Prefecture ( 峽州, in modern Yichang, Hubei ), but after Emperor Dezong issued the edict, Yu was no longer angry with Xue by that point, and submitted another petition to keep Xue as assistant.
He and Justinian agreed to convening a general council, in which Vigilius pledged himself to bring about the condemnation of the Three Chapters, but the emperor broke his pledge by issuing another edict condemning the Chapters.
On his return from China, Saichō worked hard to win recognition from the court and " in the first month of 806, Saichō ’ s Tendai Lotus school ( Tendai-hokke-shū 天台法華宗 ) won official recognition when the court of the ailing emperor Kanmu issued another edict, this one permitting two annual ordinands ( nenbundosha ) for Saichō ’ s new school on Mt.
60 years later, Philippe the Good, issued another edict against Gamay in which he stated the reasoning for the ban is that " The Dukes of Burgundy are known as the lords of the best wines in Christendom.
William Milne and his wife, and Morrison knew that this edict would make any attempt of another missionary to settle at Guangzhou exceedingly hazardous and difficult.
The same famous edict also abrogated all class distinctions respecting occupations and callings of any and every kind, thus striking another blow at the caste system which had been so rigorous in Prussia.

edict and by
< li > A variety of actions or pursuits which were thought to be injurious to public morality, might be forbidden by an edict, and those who acted contrary to such edicts were branded with the nota and degraded.
Early in his reign, Constantius issued a double edict in concert with his brothers limiting the ownership of slaves by Jewish people and banning marriages between Jews and Christian women.
A later edict issued by Constantius after becoming sole emperor decreed that a person who was proven to have converted from Christianity to Judaism would have their entire property confiscated by the state.
The original zone dictated by the edict of Cosimo III de ' Medici would eventually be considered the heart of the Chianti Classico region.
Jews were expelled from Rome because of Christian disturbances around AD 49 by the edict of Claudius.
Also, by an edict of 17 March of that year, the farmers were freed from the corvée and hereditary submission.
The edict against the reformer, which was finally adopted by the emperor and the diet, was drawn up and proposed by Aleandro.
The Byzantine Emperor, Heraclius, promised to restore Jewish rights and received Jewish help in defeating the Persians, but he soon reneged on the agreement after reconquering Palestine by issuing an edict banning Judaism from the Byzantine Empire.
On August 6, 1806, pressed both by Napoleon and by several German princes ( including some Electors ), the last Holy Roman emperor, Emperor Francis II, by edict dissolved the Empire.
In AD 295 incest was explicitly forbidden by an imperial edict, which divided the concept of incestus into two categories of unequal gravity: the incestus iuris gentium, which was applied to both Romans and non-Romans in the Empire, and the incestus iuris civilis, which concerned only Roman citizens.
The congregation of refugees, small enough at first to be accommodated in an apartment of the Count d ' Espense's residence, grew gradually from increased emigration to Brandenburg, caused by the revocation of the edict of Nantes in 1685.
After an edict by Emperor Meiji, police, railroad men and teachers moved to Western clothes.
Radama's successor, Queen Ranavalona I ( 1828 – 61 ), responded to increasing political and cultural encroachment on the part of Britain and France by issuing a royal edict prohibiting the practice of Christianity in Madagascar and pressuring most foreigners to leave the territory.
* 413 – Emperor Honorius signs an edict providing tax relief for the Italian provinces Tuscia, Campania, Picenum, Samnium, Apulia, Lucania and Calabria, who are plundered by the Visigoths.
NeXT's first workstation was officially named the NeXT Computer, although it was widely referred to as " the cube " because of its distinctive case, a 1 ft x 1 ft x 1 ft magnesium cube, an edict of Jobs ' designed by Apple IIc case designer Frogdesign.
The royal edict, registered by the Parlement of Paris on March 15, 1667 created the office of lieutenant général de police (" lieutenant general of police "), who was to be the head of the new Paris police force, and defined the task of the police as " ensuring the peace and quiet of the public and of private individuals, purging the city of what may cause disturbances, procuring abundance, and having each and everyone live according to their station and their duties ".
The scheme of the Paris police force was extended to the rest of France by a royal edict of October 1699, resulting in the creation of lieutenants general of police in all large French cities and towns.
In 1671, the Pope published an edict by which he declared that a noble might be a merchant without loss of his nobility, provided always that he did not sell by retail ".
Subsequently the Cardinal nephew wrote to the nuncios who resided in the courts of Europe, stating that the excesses committed by the ambassadors had induced the pope to publish the edict.
However, there is no credible evidence that such a edict was ever issued by Gregory IX.

edict and Protestant
A copy of the first edict, sent for safekeeping to Protestant Geneva, survives.
The " edict of pacification ", as it was termed, authorised Protestant services only in chapels of seigneurs and justices, with the stipulation that such services be held outside the walls of towns.
Louis XIV's pious second wife Madame de Maintenon was a strong advocate of Protestant persecution and urged Louis to revoke Henry IV's edict ; her confessor and spiritual adviser, François de la Chaise, must be held largely responsible.
With the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, Louis XIV withdrew the privileges and toleration that Protestant Huguenots in France had been guaranteed under the edict for nearly 87 years, and ordered the destruction of Huguenot churches and the closure of Huguenot schools.
Born in Niort ( Deux-Sèvres ), he belonged to a noble Protestant family of Languedoc which had been reduced to poverty by the revocation of the edict of Nantes.
In Lorraine, Antoine had to face the spreading of Protestant Reformation, against which he published an edict on 26 December 1523.
After the Diet of Speyer had confirmed the edict of Worms, Philipp I felt the need to reconcile the diverging views of Martin Luther and Ulrich Zwingli in order to develop a unified Protestant theology.

edict and princes
Early in his rule, he issued an edict that all Saudi princes had to school their children inside the country, rather than sending them abroad ; this had the effect of making it " fashionable " for upper-class families to bring their sons back to study in the Kingdom.
Under the guise that Mindon wanted to bid his children ( other princes and princesses ) farewell, Hsinbyumashin had all royals of close age ( who could potentially be heir to the throne ) mercilessly slaughtered by edict, to ensure that Thibaw and her daughter Supayalat would assume the throne.

edict and time
Some time after, Cardinal Altieri declared that he had not intended to comprise the ambassadors among those for whom the edict was intended, and that the pope had never contemplated subjecting them to it.
Around AD 130 the jurist Salvius Iulianus drafted a standard form of the praetor's edict, which was used by all praetors from that time onwards.
In-the time of Kao-tsung 1127-1163 pattern packs were issued by imperial edict.
Filtering and speed of e-mail delivery were not priorities at that time and in any case the government and educational servers which started the Internet were covered by a federal edict forbidding the transfer of commercial messages.
The translation of the Greek passage reveals that the inscription is a royal edict recording the benefits conferred on Egypt by the pharaoh Ptolemy V Epiphanes at the time of his coronation.
During the time of the Roman Republic the Urban Praetor allegedly issued an annual edict, usually on the advice of jurists ( since the Praetor himself was not necessarily educated in the law ), setting out the circumstances under which he would grant remedies.
In 1924, the Imperial Japanese Navy declared in an edict on fleet organization that " for the time being " the Combined Fleet would be a permanent organization consisting of the IJN 1st Fleet and IJN 2nd Fleet.
The Empress Dowager Cixi, a Manchu, issued such an edict following the Boxer Rebellion in order to appease foreigners, but it was rescinded a short time later.
Ironically the edict was withdrawn a few months later, although by this time his patroness, Electress Louisa Henrietta had died and so he was still without a position.
He removed in 1625 to London, where he lived in Gray's Inn, and for eighteen years from that time he was a prolific writer for the stage, producing more than thirty regular plays, tragedies, comedies, and tragicomedies, and showing no sign of exhaustion when a stop was put to his occupation by the Puritan edict of 1642.
However, it took time for Jewish communities to accept the imperial edict, as the Byzantine Emperor Theodosius had to force them to adapt to the new situation in 393.
Commenting on the 1954 enunciation of them, Peter Lyon, a UK academic specializing in international relations, wrote: " Though neutralists in general, and at that time Mr Nehru in particular, seemed to regard these principles as being a special contribution to world politics, they were not at all original, were repetitious, and really boiled down to the edict that a state's independence should not be infringed.
His father and all his ancestors seem to have borne the name Simonde, at least from the time when they migrated from Dauphiné to Switzerland at the revocation of the edict of Nantes.
His edict, an exclusion principle, " There are No Doppelgangers " means no two concepts can be the same ( all interactions occur with different perspectives making time incommensurable for actors ).
At this time Severus rejected the Henotikon of Zeno, dismissing it as " the annulling edict ," and " the disuniting edict " ( Labbe, v. 121 ), and anathematized Peter Mongus, the Non-Chalcedonian patriarch of Alexandria, for accepting it.
The eunuch filed charges against Bing for refusing to abide by the edict — a capital offense — but by that time Emperor Wu had realized his error and declared a general pardon.
This edict offered relief to all the major non-Catholic faiths of the time – Calvinist Huguenots, Lutherans, and Jews.
The first known use of the spelling Doukhobor is attested in a government edict of 1799, exiling 90 of them to Finland ( presumably, the Vyborg area, which was already part of the Russian Empire at the time ) for their anti-war propaganda.
The name Montreuil was recorded for the first time in a royal edict of 722 as Monasteriolum, meaning " little monastery " in Medieval Latin.
Engine offerings were largely unchanged from 1965 except that the Tri-Power 389 option was discontinued, leaving only the larger 421 available with the three two-barrel carb option, which was offered for the last time this year due to a new General Motors edict that banned the use of multi-carb options on all GM cars with the exception of the Chevrolet Corvette starting with the 1967 model year.
Amir Kabir issued an edict banning ornate and excessively formal writing in government documents ; the beginning of a modern Persian prose style dates from this time.
Roman conservatism finds succinct expression in an edict of the censors from 92 BCE, as preserved by the 2nd-century historian Suetonius: “ All new that is done contrary to the usage and the customs of our ancestors, seems not to be right .” But because the mos maiorum was a matter of custom, not written law, the complex norms it embodied evolved over time.
The edict, which survives in the Hou Han Shu shows that at the time Buddha was associated in the opinion of the Chinese imperial court with Daoism.

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